democracy

...took a more favourable view of democracy in his studies of the variety, stability, and composition of actual democratic governments. In his observation that “the basis of a democratic state is
liberty,” Aristotle proposed a connection between the ideas of democracy and
liberty that would be strongly emphasized by all later advocates of democracy.

human rights

The first generation, civil and political rights, derives primarily from the 17th- and 18th-century reformist theories noted above (i.e., those associated with the English, American, and French revolutions). Infused with the political philosophy of liberal individualism and the related economic and social doctrine of laissez-faire, the first generation conceives of human rights more in negative...

importance to Judaism

...challenge and a warning. Their liberation from the shackles of discrimination, segregation, and rejection at the beginning of the modern era was understood by many to be the touchstone of all human
liberty. Until the final ghettoization of the Jew—it is well to remember that the term
ghetto belongs in the first instance to Jewish history—at the end of the Middle Ages and the...

libertarianism

political philosophy that takes individual
liberty to be the primary political value. It may be understood as a form of liberalism, the political philosophy associated with the English philosophers John Locke and John Stuart Mill, the Scottish economist Adam Smith, and the American statesman Thomas Jefferson. Liberalism seeks to define and justify the legitimate powers of government in terms of...

paternalism

attitude and practice that are commonly, though not exclusively, understood as an infringement on the personal freedom and autonomy of a person (or class of persons) with a beneficent or protective intent. Paternalism generally involves competing claims between individual
liberty and authoritative social control. Questions concerning paternalism also may include both the claims of individual...

theories of Rousseau

...contract depicted in the
Discourse on the Origin of Inequality, people would receive in exchange for their independence a better kind of freedom, namely true political, or republican,
liberty. Such
liberty is to be found in obedience to a self-imposed law.

views of

Hobbes

In Hobbes’s social contract, the many trade
liberty for safety. Liberty, with its standing invitation to local conflict and finally all-out war—a “war of every man against every man”—is overvalued in traditional political philosophy and popular opinion, according to Hobbes; it is better for people to transfer the right of governing themselves to the sovereign. Once...

Marx

...a materialist or economic theory of history. Before people can do anything else, he held, they must first produce what they need to survive, which is to say that they are subject to necessity. Freedom for Marx is largely a matter of overcoming necessity. Necessity compels people to labour so that they may survive, and only those who are free from this compulsion will be free to develop...

Wiesenthal

...we, the survivors, have to step in and tell them over and over again, that all this really did happen and that it is more important for all of you than you can imagine. For you are used to living in freedom, but you should recognize the danger that lies in fast changes, that can take away your freedom before you even realize it. Freedom is like health, I always tell young people; you don’t...